Protesters gather at the porches of lawmakers or at their
workplaces, dressed appropriately to convey their message and
holding signs with their demands.

The new protest strategy is called 'escraches' and has arrived
in Spain from Argentina. The word 'escraches' literally means
'denunciation' in Argentinian slang.

The 'doorstep' and 'targeted' rallies will have more effect on
the lawmakers than massive gatherings in city centers, organizers
believe.

"There is a certain lassitude - the demonstrations grouping
together tens of thousands of people don't seem to be as effective
as before," Tomas Alberich, a sociology professor at the
University of Jaen, told Reuters.

The protesters want the government to change Spain's laws and
end the evictions, allow insolvent homeowners to write off their
debts by surrendering their homes and transform repossessed flats
owned by banks into social housing.

Under the current law, a bank can pursue a mortgage holder to
pay off the remaining balance of a loan if the value of the seized
property is not enough. Moreover, the debts are not even cancelled
in death, making Spain's mortgage laws way harsher than in many
other countries.

The grass-roots organization in Spain overseeing the 'escraches'
is The Platform for Mortgage Victims - or PAN in its Spanish
acronym. They insist they do not promote violence as they move from
one door to another with red and green placards in their hands,
symbolizing the 'yes' and 'no' vote in parliament.

"Our protocol is to go and try
and talk to the member of parliament, not all at once, but taking
them aside and putting them face to face with a real case of
someone who has been evicted," David Cobo, a spokesman for
PAN in the town of Alcala de Henares near Madrid told Reuters.

The lawmakers, however, are less than excited over this new
strategy.

"We all have a right to defend
our ideas, but intimidation can never be a form of participating in
public issues," Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy, targeted by an
attempted protest at his wilderness retreat last weekend, told his
ruling People's Party on Wednesday.

"I condemn these acts," he
stated.

Spanish courts have executed 252,826 eviction orders --
including a record 75,605 last year -- since 2008, when the
recession broke off. As millions lost their jobs, they failed to
make their mortgage payments and were evicted as the result. The
evictions were followed by a whole string of suicides, and that's
when PAN started their activity.

Before 'escraches', PAN staged demonstrations at houses where
people were about to be evicted, to specifically prevent police
from reaching the premises.